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On This Day in Literary History
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Allison, Mod Nerd
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Jul 18, 2016 10:05PM

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Have you found a good site for daily literary info? I found On This Day... in a Google search and found a literary section on that site. Then my computer gave me grief. Where did you get your info?

http://librarybooklists.org/literaryb...

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/July_20

July 25, 1897, Jack London sails for the Klondike to participate in the gold rush. He will begin writing his successful stories while there like "Call of the Wild".

On February 6th, 1939, Raymond Chandler's The Big Sleep was published.

Raymond Chandler was fifty-one, an ex-oil company executive who had taken up writing at the age of forty-five after being fired for alcohol-inspired absenteeism. This was his first novel, and the first of seven featuring the ever-inimitable and much-copied Philip Marlowe.
source: http://www.todayinliterature.com/inde...
First edition hardcover looked like this:



According to a write up in Spirit of the Times, about 2,800 people attended, all wearing their finest silks, laces, satin's, and jewels, that "a million dollars could not buy". It's said that dinner alone costed $3,000 (almost $76,000 in today's money), and that the ball lasted well into the next morning. People said Charles Dickens looked pale and thunderstruck, and that his wife seemed "overpowered" by the reception, but nevertheless enjoyed it. Such is the life of one of the greatest authors who've ever lived, I suppose!